Clouthier v. County of Contra Costa

591 F.3d 1232, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 884, 2010 WL 114958
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 2010
Docket07-16703
StatusPublished
Cited by461 cases

This text of 591 F.3d 1232 (Clouthier v. County of Contra Costa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clouthier v. County of Contra Costa, 591 F.3d 1232, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 884, 2010 WL 114958 (9th Cir. 2010).

Opinions

Opinion by Judge IKUTA; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge BLOCK.

IKUTA, Circuit Judge:

The plaintiffs in this appeal brought an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that a mental health specialist, two sheriffs deputies, and the County of Contra Costa violated the Fourteenth Amendment due process rights of their son, Robert Clouthier, by failing to prevent his suicide while he was in pretrial detention. The district court granted summary judgment [1237]*1237in favor of the defendants. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment as to the two deputies and the County, but we reverse as to the mental health specialist because there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether she was deliberately indifferent to a substantial risk of serious harm to Clouthier.

I

On the evening of July 26, 2005, after an argument with his father at the Clouthiers’ home, Clouthier became violent, destroyed a china cabinet, and jumped through a plate glass window, resulting in lacerations and severe bleeding. His family called the police; the sheriffs office responded along with ambulance and fire personnel. After Clouthier’s father signed a citizen’s arrest for battery, the sheriffs office placed Clouthier into custody for both misdemeanor battery and felony vandalism. Clouthier was extremely upset about being taken into custody. As he was taken into the ambulance, he hit his head against the side of the ambulance several times. Once at the hospital, he refused to have his wounds stitched. The next morning, July 27, Clouthier was booked into the Martinez Detention Facility (“MDF”).

At MDF, new detainees fill out a mental health questionnaire during the intake process. If an inmate answers “yes” to certain questions, he is interviewed by a member of Contra Costa County Mental Health Services. The Mental Health Services department, run by administrative director Miles Kramer, works in conjunction with the Sheriffs Department by virtue of a contractual agreement. Mental Health Services provides on-site evaluation, counseling, therapy, suicide prevention, medication management, crisis intervention, and substance abuse counseling, while the Sheriffs Department custodial deputies maintain security and safety in the jail’s housing units.

After filling out a mental health questionnaire, Clouthier was evaluated by Sharlene Hanaway, a Contra Costa County Mental Health Specialist. Clouthier told Hanaway several times that he was suicidal, and that he wanted to be “unconscious for the rest of his life.” Hanaway described Clouthier as “despondent, hopeless, suicidal” and “one of the most suicidal inmates she had ever seen.” Hanaway’s notes state that Clouthier had made numerous past suicide attempts, including one incident two months earlier that required hospitalization after he cut his wrists. Hanaway’s notes reflect that Clouthier had taken medication for several years, but that he had ceased doing so two and a half years ago.

Hanaway placed Clouthier in a “safety cell” in the intake area of the jail. She had him wear a suicide smock, a stiff garment that cannot be fashioned into a noose. She restrained his ankles and began noting his status every fifteen minutes in an Observation Log. She also approached the mental health workers, including Margaret Blush, and the deputies in the intake area, and advised them that Clouthier was “truly suicidal” and “the real deal.”

Hanaway spoke with Clouthier periodically throughout the morning of July 27, “talking to him and making sure he was okay and [asking] what his state of mind was.” By that afternoon, Clouthier informed Hanaway that he was not feeling suicidal anymore. Hanaway did not trust him, however, noting “he had multiple suicide attempts before, and given his history and his despondency, his hopelessness, you just don’t recover that quickly.” Hanaway convinced Clouthier to consider medication, and she called for an emergency consultation with Dr. Douglas Hanlin, a psychiatrist. Hanlin prescribed Effexor XR for Clouthier’s depression and Trazo[1238]*1238done to help him sleep. Hanlin also recommended that Clouthier be placed in M-Module, a housing section for unstable inmates, and that he subsequently be reevaluated to determine whether a short-term involuntary hospitalization would be necessary.

Around 2 p.m., Hanaway transferred Clouthier to Observation Room 7, one of the rooms in M-Module equipped with large windows through which the Sheriffs deputies can monitor the occupant. Hanaway spoke to Matt Foley, the deputy on duty in M-Module at the time, and asked Foley whether there was room for Clouthier in the M-Module. She told Foley that Clouthier was suicidal, had been suicidal all day long, “had numerous prior attempts,” and needed to be on 15-minute checks. As documented in the Observation Log, Foley checked on Clouthier every fifteen minutes for the next five hours, until Clouthier was taken off the Observation Log.

Before she left her shift, Hanaway gave a copy of her notes to Blush and told her that Clouthier “had been very suicidal throughout the day and that [Hanaway] felt that he needed to be in the observation room and that he needed to be observed and [Blush] needed to look in on him.” Hanaway left MDF around 6:30 p.m. on July 27.1

Around 7 p.m. the same evening, Blush went up to M-Module and spoke with Clouthier for “[l]ess than five minutes.” She informed Foley that Clouthier could be given regular prison clothes and a blanket but that he was not to be given any utensils or personal hygiene items. She also told Foley that Clouthier could be removed from the fifteen minute Observation Log, and she made an entry to that effect in the log. Blush testified that she took Clouthier off the Observation Log because in her view, the risk of suicide had decreased, although she was uncertain whether it had disappeared. She explained that her “clinical judgment was that Robert was improving, would benefit from having normal jail clothes and bedding and could be further evaluated by mental health staff the following day.” However, Blush also agreed that Clouthier was not “out of the woods” yet.

Blush claims she told Foley to keep Clouthier in the Observation Room, and Foley indicated he understood and responded “I’m sitting right here.” Foley disputes this. He testified that Blush did not instruct him to keep Clouthier in the Observation Room. Later, he testified that he could not remember if Blush directed him to keep Clouthier in the Observation Room, but that if she had so directed him it would have been something to which he would have paid attention. Foley did not write down Blush’s alleged instruction to keep Clouthier in the Observation Room in the “Red Book,” a log the deputies kept to inform one another of important events, or otherwise communicate an instruction to the next deputy on duty.

Regardless of whether Blush instructed Foley to keep Clouthier in the Observation Room, Foley did not move Clouthier from the room, and he remained there when Foley left work on July 27. Foley returned on July 28 to find Clouthier was still in the Observation Room. Per M-Module standard practice, Foley continued to check on Clouthier every thirty minutes. Foley ended his duty at 9:30 pm on the evening of July 28 with Clouthier still in the Observation Room.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
591 F.3d 1232, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 884, 2010 WL 114958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clouthier-v-county-of-contra-costa-ca9-2010.